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Overview

The Center for Puerto Rican Studies (CENTRO) will award five producers $15,000 each to participate in CENTRO Social Documentary Lab. Each will produce one of five episodes for the next season of the TV show Puerto Rican Voices. Puerto Rican Voices is an investigative documentary TV series produced by CENTRO, which focuses on stories that highlight the social issues of Puerto Ricans in the diaspora and their connection to the archipelago. The series airs on CUNY-TV and then gets published on our YouTube channel. For this new season, we are focusing our series on stories of placement and displacement of the Puerto Rican diaspora; with a focus on well-known diasporic communities, recently established diasporic communities, and  returning migrants to Puerto Rico. 


 

Benefits: None

Schedule: Flexible

Location: Regional Field 


 

What We Are Looking For

The Season 6 of Puerto Rican Voices is looking for pitches that center stories of Puerto Rican and diasporican placement, displacement, and migration in communities across the US and return migration to Puerto Rico. Examples include:

  • Histories and new issues in historic diasporic communities 
  • Stories and community efforts in lesser known diasporic communities 
  • Formation of new diasporic communities across and beyond the United States
  • Gentrification, dispossession, and environmental battles in diasporic communities
  • Rematriation and Return Migration to Puerto Rico 
  • Sexiles and LGBTQIA political, social, and economic displacement
  • Mutual aid efforts, communal practices, support systems, and solidarity projects in the diaspora 
  • Creative individual or collective practices that bolster cultural preservation and transformation
  • Historical preservation, archive development, or public memorialization projects
  • Local and diasporic foodways, food justice, and food geographies in the context of shared and co-constituted communities  
  • Stories about place, land, bodies, and race
  • Internal displacements, new migrations, and cultural exclusion or erasure in Puerto Rico


 

Potential projects must include the following five-pillars:

  1. Story: The episode must have a clear narrative arc with a well defined investigative angle. We are looking for compelling stories that drive the subject or theme of the documentary episode, and are connected to the season at large. The final product should be accessible to a general audience. 
  2. Unique perspective or angle: The stories must have a unique perspective or angle about the theme or topic being proposed. Show us how you are bringing an original perspective and research as a filmmaker. The pitch should ask or propose questions that have not been asked and decenter traditional approaches. 
  3. Historical Context: The project must look at the larger historical context of the featured community, including but not limited to: issues of colonialism, labor, migration, geography, gender, housing, education, etc. How are you framing this complex story/history for the non-expert viewer? 
  4. Interconnections: Projects must be developed through a critical lens that considers the interconnections present in the communities or participants to be centered; should show agency, foreground undertold stories, and complicate the ways we think about certain issues, groups, individuals, or communities. 
  5. Representational ethics: The proposed project and creative team must demonstrate understanding of the lived experiences of the participants and communities; prioritizing first-hand knowledge and exercising curiosity to explore new dimensions of the issues presented in a non-extractive way.


 

Duties & Responsibilities of Selected Producers:

General 

  • Propose and execute an episode following the Season 6 PRV guidelines
  • Select their team members for their episode (DOP, Sound person, etc)
  • Manage episode budget on the field
  • Communicate and report progress with the Series Producer/Showrunner 
  • Collect likeness and location releases and coordinate film permissions
  • Follow Puerto Rican Voices Series workflows on Asana (our project management tool) 

Pre-Production

  • Participate with a cohort of filmmakers as part of Centro’s Social Documentary Lab
  • Attend workshops provided by Centro to learn about our Archives, Data Team and other resources at Centro
  • Work with the series producer to develop a production plan for their episode
  • Coordinate interviews, and b-roll shots 

Production, Post-Production 

  • Direct the shooting in the field and conduct interviews
  • Gather clearances, behind the scenes photographs, and video files
  • Media manage and DIT to ensure proper backup of files and delivery of footage to Centro for editing 
  • Review footage with editors
  • Share the list for locators, lower-thirds, credit of their episode with Series Producer
  • Participate in cohort meetings to watch the episodes and enact feedback
  • Enact notes and deliver along with editors the video cuts delivered by filmmakers: rough cut, fine cut, final cut
  • Work with the series producers to finalize and package all materials ready for distribution
  • Participate in the promotional efforts and public presentations of the Series


 

Services covered by CENTRO

As Series Producer, CENTRO will cover the following services:

  • Fact-checking
  • Editing
  • Audio VO recording pending project needs. 
  • Writing support
  • Translation
  • Graphics
  • Basic color/ Sound mix
  • Mastering


Eligibility

  • Open to all but applicants must demonstrate a close relationship to Puerto Rico or the Puerto Rican diaspora and its histories
  • Applicants must have directed or produced at least one 20+ minute documentary short-film
  • Project and budget proposal and must demonstrate the producer's ability to deliver the episode


AI USAGE CLAUSE

As you write your proposal, we ask that you do not use AI tools to write your narrative. While AI can be useful, we want to hear your voice: your experience and vision. Help our selection committee understand not just what you do, but also why and the impact you think you can make. CENTRO is not looking for perfect proposals but genuine ones instead.


Award Amount: $15,000

Deadline: June 1, 2025 at 11:59 pm.

Submissions must be received on or before the provided deadline. 

Decision Announced: Winners will be notified by end of July 2025

Fellowship Begins: Fall 2025


 

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About Rooted + Relational

Rooted + Relational is a five-year research initiative at the Center for Puerto Rican Studies (CENTRO) funded by the Mellon Foundation. It seeks to reimagine the research agenda and scholarly and community impact of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies (CENTRO) in the United States and beyond. This initiative aims to make CENTRO a public-facing, horizontal, decolonial feminist institute that opens new paths in academia and expands community-driven research beyond the walls of the academy. By strategically linking the CENTRO’s research agenda, data hub projects, media, arts, and culture output, scholarly mentoring initiatives, and community partnerships, it addresses pressing social, political, and economic issues facing Puerto Rico and the Diaspora. The goal is to create a unifying higher learning community at CENTRO that tends to the intellectual and cultural needs of our committed and diverse public.  


 

About the Center for Puerto Rican Studies

The Center for Puerto Rican Studies (CENTRO) at Hunter College, City University of New York, is a research institute dedicated to the study and interpretation of the Puerto Rican experience in the United States by producing and disseminating relevant interdisciplinary research and collecting, preserving, and providing access to archive and library resources that document their history and culture. CENTRO seeks to link scholarship with social action and political debates, and contribute to the enrichment of Puerto Rican studies.  

CENTRO is dedicated to the comprehensive collection of data, graphic arts, and library and archival resources that document the history and legacy of Puerto Ricans in the United States, to the study of critical and relevant social issues and conditions affecting this culturally diverse nation, for the purpose of promoting effective community and public sector interventions, and supporting the intellectual and educational advancement of young scholars.  

CENTRO's Puerto Rican Diaspora Archives contain more than 5,000 cubic feet of materials and include documents from artists, writers, politicians, activists, and other prominent community figures and organizations. The archives document the diversity of individuals and communities that reside in the city and have sought to focus their efforts on historically Puerto Rican enclaves such as the Lower East Side (Loisaida), East Harlem (El Barrio), the South Bronx, and Williamsburg, Brooklyn. In addition, it houses the records of the Offices of the Government of Puerto Rico in the United States, which record the migration and working conditions of Puerto Ricans from the early 1930s until the closing of their offices in the mid-1990s, and document the formation of Puerto Rican communities in neighborhoods throughout the Northeast, Chicago, and Florida, with a special concentration in New York City.

 

About Hunter College

Located in the heart of Manhattan, Hunter is the largest college in the City University of New York (CUNY) system. Founded in 1870, it is also one of the oldest public colleges in the country and famous for a student body that is as diverse as the city itself. Most Hunter students are the first in their families to attend college and many go on to top professional and graduate programs, winning Rhodes and Fulbright scholarships, Mellon fellowships, National Institutes of Health grants, and other competitive honors. More than 23,000 students currently attend Hunter, pursuing undergraduate and graduate degrees in more than 170 areas of study. The 1,700 full- and part-time members of Hunter’s faculty are unparalleled. They receive prestigious national grants, contribute to the world's leading academic journals, and play major roles in cutting-edge research. They are fighting cancer, formulating public policy, expanding our culture, enhancing technology, and more.


 


 

The Center for Puerto Rican Studies invites applications for the 2025-2026 cohort of the CENTRO Research Fellows Program. This program convenes scholars, writers, and faculty in a cohort model that responds to an annual theme. The fellowships are held for one year (August 2025-July 2026). Fellows will spend their time at CENTRO working on a specific research project and will be required to attend weekly seminar meetings, as well as additional workshops, and public events. 

Theme (2025-2026) 

Boricuas In Relation

El Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños—CENTRO—The Center for Puerto Rican Studies is the oldest and largest university-based research institute, library, and archive exclusively dedicated to the Puerto Rican experience in the United States. It was founded in 1973 by a coalition of students, faculty, and activists to support the fledgling field of Puerto Rican Studies in the City University of New York and to promote access to higher education by those of Puerto Rican descent. At the heart of these founders’ mission was the need for scholarly analysis of Puerto Ricans’ presence in the United States and the systemic forces that have subjugated and marginalized them within American society. In the present, we continue expanding our efforts to collect, preserve, and provide access to archival and library resources documenting the history and culture of Puerto Ricans. We do so in broad and inclusive ways and encourage interdisciplinary research into new emerging fields of study and phenomena that are traditionally invisible to researchers, as well as emerging issues that are dramatically changing our lives and ways of living today.

The 2025-2026 theme, Boricuas in Relation, invites researchers to engage with the phenomenon of Boricua archipelagic and diasporic community formation with other racial and ethnic groups. Boricuas have long developed and sustained political, social, kinship, creative, labor, and spiritual practices with multiple communities across the United States and beyond. We are interested in works that examine the experience and impact of migration, language, assimilation, cultural and linguistic resilience, and the connections between Puerto Ricans and other racial and ethnic groups.

The group will be asked to consider Boricua relations with Black, Indigenous, Asian, Latinx, Caribbean, Middle Eastern, and/or other communities. The theme of Boricuas in Relation attends to the lived experiences and histories of Puerto Ricans in the archipelago and the diaspora and builds on existing critical scholarship while engaging in new directions within and beyond Puerto Rican Studies. Overall this theme asks: what can we learn from the complex and overlapping relationships that Puerto Ricans have across global geographies and specific cities, sites, and communities? What do we owe one another as we strive for political and cultural decolonization, self-determination and liberation, and anti-racism in our communities? These questions, and others will guide our discussions during this year-long seminar, where we will be considering different uses of the archive and explore how these spaces, collections, and practices can be transformed through a decolonial, feminist, and queer lens. 

Possible Topics:

  • Puerto Rico and other US territories
  • Puerto Rican, Black, and women of color feminisms
  • Radical solidarity movements
  • New migration patterns
  • Puerto Rico and the broader Hispanophone Caribbean
  • Puerto Rico and the Anglophone Caribbean
  • Puerto Rico and the Francophone Caribbean
  • Puerto Rico and the African, Arab, European, and Indian World
  • Asian presence in Puerto Rico
  • Spiritual and religious practices 
  • Puerto Ricans in the media
  • Food and culinary fusions 
  • Dance and movement 
  • Music and Sonic relations
  • Cross cultural care work 
  • Collaborative artistic practices
  • Linguistics and Anthropolitical Linguistics 
  • Mapping and cartographies 
  • Placemaking and community building
  • Education 
  • Legal studies
  • Urban developments 
  • Labor and activist movements

We invite applications from scholars in all fields of study and disciplines, including creative writing and visual arts. 

Qualifications
Hybrid Fellows:

We will select up to five hybrid fellows and will award each $25k

  • Open to researchers and artists working on the annual theme who are unable to relocate to New York City for the duration of the fellowship year
  • PhD is not required, but fellows must have extensive background in Puerto Rican Studies.

Artist-In-Residence:

We will select up to one artist researcher-in-residence and will be awarded $75k 

  • Open to artists, of all disciplines, working on the annual theme
  • PhD is not required, but fellows must have extensive background in Puerto Rican Studies.
  • Must be in residence at CENTRO in New York City for the duration of the 2025-2026 academic year

Dissertation Fellows:

We will select up to two dissertation fellows and will award each $25k

  • Must be ABD (all but dissertation) in a related discipline by July 1, 2025
  • Can be hybrid or in person at CENTRO in New York City
  • One of the 3 reference letters must come from the dissertation advisor
  • May be hybrid or in residence (in-residence requires a minimum of 3 on site days per week)


How to Apply

Please submit the following through Submittable:

  • Cover letter describing related qualifications, experience, and proposed research activities
  • Current CV
  • Writing sample related to the position (20-25 double spaced pages) or artist portfolio
  • One page course proposal (brief course description and selected readings)
  • Contact information for 3 professional references


To apply, please fill out an application here.


f you have any questions about these positions, please email programs@centropr.app.


The Center for Puerto Rican Studies (CENTRO) at Hunter College is pleased to announce that it is now accepting applications for its second cohort of Community Micro-Grants for the Rooted & Relational Micro-Grant Program. CENTRO will award up to 12 community organizations, individuals, or projects with grants up to $5,000 for community-based programs that are non-institutionally affiliated. The 2025-2026 theme of the Rooted + Relational initiative is Boricuas in Relation, and it invites applicants who explore the formation of Boricua archipelagic and diasporic communities in connection with other racial and ethnic groups. Throughout history, Boricuas have developed and sustained political, social, kinship, creative, labor, and spiritual practices alongside diverse communities across the United States and beyond. 

Community Micro-Grant Recipients are non-academic/non-institutionally affiliated community organizers, artists, creatives, writers, farmers, activists, organizers, and cultural workers or groups, residing in Puerto Rico or the USA, who collaborate on projects with participants who identify as Puerto Ricans or are of Puerto Rican descent, or work on a community project related to Puerto Rican histories, legacies, or futures. Community Micro-Grant Recipients will spend the year in their communities of choice working on their proposed projects, events, or initiatives and will be invited to share their work at a CENTRO event (format to be announced). They will also be required to attend three virtual meetings and their work will be highlighted and shared through CENTRO's communications and media channels. 

Eligibility

  • Applicants must be community-based individuals, groups, or organizations engaged in artistic, community-driven, agricultural, activist, or cultural projects. 
  • Applicants must not be affiliated with a college or university (professors, graduate students, and academic staff are not eligible).
  • Applicants must be 18 years of age or older.

Submission Guidelines

  • Please be ready to provide the following information:
  • Required Identifying Information
  • Program/initiative/event title
  • Project description (1 paragraph)
  • Objectives (bullet points)
  • Biographical or organizational sketch (150 words)
  • Timeline (implementation plan)
  • Budget (total project cost and requested grant amount, up to $5,000)
  • Optional: A PDF or hyperlink showcasing past works (photos, media, press, reviews, or portfolio).
  • Proposals may be submitted in English or Spanish.

About Rooted + Relational 

Rooted + Relational is a five-year research initiative at the Center for Puerto Rican Studies (CENTRO), funded by the Mellon Foundation. It aims to transform CENTRO into a public-facing, decolonial feminist institute that fosters community-driven research beyond academia. By integrating CENTRO’s research, data projects, media, arts, scholarly mentoring, and community partnerships, the initiative addresses key social, political, and economic issues affecting Puerto Rico and its diaspora. Its ultimate goal is to create a unified, inclusive learning community that serves the intellectual and cultural needs of a diverse public. 

Center for Puerto Rican Studies